Antagonism of HIV-specific CD4+ T cells by C-terminal truncation of a minimum epitope

Antagonism of T cell responses by variants of the cognate peptide is a potential mechanism of viral escape from immune responses and may play a role in the ability of HIV to evade immune control. We show here a rarely described mechanism of antagonism by a peptide shorter than the minimum length epi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular Immunology 2006-03, Vol.43 (9), p.1349-1357
Hauptverfasser: Norris, Philip J., Stone, Jennifer D., Anikeeva, Nadezhda, Heitman, John W., Wilson, Ingrid C., Hirschkorn, Dale F., Clark, Margaret J., Moffett, Howell F., Cameron, Thomas O., Sykulev, Yuri, Stern, Lawrence J., Walker, Bruce D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Antagonism of T cell responses by variants of the cognate peptide is a potential mechanism of viral escape from immune responses and may play a role in the ability of HIV to evade immune control. We show here a rarely described mechanism of antagonism by a peptide shorter than the minimum length epitope for an HIV p24-specific CD4+ T cell clone. The shorter antagonist peptide–MHC complex bound the T cell receptor (TCR), albeit with lower affinity than the full-length agonist peptide. Prior work showing the crystal structure of the peptide–MHC complex revealed a unique glycine hinge near the C-terminus of the agonist peptide, allowing the generation of full-length antagonist peptide lacking the hinge. These results confirm the dependence of productive TCR engagement on residues spilling out from the C-terminus of the MHC binding groove and show that partial engagement of the TCR with a truncated, low-affinity ligand can result in T cell antagonism.
ISSN:0161-5890
1872-9142
1365-2567
DOI:10.1016/j.molimm.2005.09.004